Assessing the experience of the federal government’s myriad customers is a challenging task. While agencies have made meaningful strides to measure how well they are delivering services to the public, there is still a lack of reliable performance measures that allow for cross-agency comparisons and offer agency leaders an understanding of the factors that will best help them build a strong CX culture.
Through research and case studies, however, we know that organizations that create productive environments for their employees are better positioned to deliver on their critical missions and provide a better experience for the people they serve. We also know that agency mission-support services—acquisition, finance, human capital and information technology—are a fundamental component of the federal employee experience and organizational success.
Given these previous research findings, the Partnership for Public Service set out to understand what measurable elements of agency work environments correlate with a positive internal customer experience for federal employees which drives a positive experience for the public. Using a variety of employee experience and human capital data, we identified four factors that are linked to a productive internal employee customer experience and developed a new way for federal leaders to assess and enhance the performance of their organizations in CX.
Report Audience
This product is intended to serve mission-support leaders as they look for ways to improve service delivery to their internal customers, as well as agency executives who seek to drive change within their organizations and enable a better experience for the public.
Senior leaders such as Assistant Secretaries for Administration and Management, and Customer Experience Officers can also benefit from this product as they think about the roles internal functions and internal employee experience play in their work to support enterprise-wide CX efforts across their agencies.
To identify the links between the experience of federal employees as customers of mission-support functions and other elements of agency work environments, the Partnership built a dataset composed of employee satisfaction and human capital data from 21 of the 24 CFO Act agencies1—the Cabinet departments and largest agencies within the federal government.
The primary data source for the outcome variable in our analysis was the 2023 Mission-Support Customer Satisfaction Survey led by the Office of Management and Budget and annually administered by the General Services Administration. This data was used to capture employee satisfaction with the support and services they received from their designated HR, IT, finance and procurement functions. Alongside this measure, we compiled data from the Partnership and BCG’s 2023 Best Places to Work in the Federal Government® rankings, the Office of Personnel Management’s human capital dataset, FedScope and the Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey to capture various aspects of agency work environments that served as our explanatory variables.
Using a variety of statistical analyses, we explored the relationship between internal customer satisfaction, as measured by the 2023 Mission-Support Customer Satisfaction Survey, each workplace category from the Best Places to Work rankings that measure a variety of aspects of the employee experience, and several variables measuring other aspects of agency work environments:
In the end, this analysis revealed statistically significant, positive relationships between internal customer satisfaction with mission-support services and:
In other words, the Cabinet departments and independent agencies with higher rates of employee engagement and satisfaction with leadership, communication and employee input reported higher employee satisfaction with the support and services from their human capital, IT, finance and acquisition functions.
Given the established link between effective mission-support services and agency performance, these findings underscore the importance of focusing on the employee experience to enable a better experience for the public.
Using the results of the analysis, the Partnership calculated employee customer experience scores for 21 of the 24 CFO Act agencies by averaging their respective customer service satisfaction, employee engagement, internal communication, effective leadership and employee input scores. This new measure, and accompanying rankings, shed light on the organizations that provide the most constructive environments for mission delivery and a productive external customer experience. All scores are out of 100.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the agencies responsible for providing mission-support services to the rest of government—the General Services Administration and the Office of Personnel Management—registered the highest scores, a reflection of their investments to improve and sustain the quality of their mission-support services and their employee experience.
On the lower end, some of government’s largest organizations—the Department of Homeland Security, the Social Security Administration and the Department of Justice registered the lowest scores. For most, this was driven by lower internal communication and employee input scores, an element that can be difficult for large agencies to manage effectively. Our research and work with federal agencies have shown that crafting a detailed communications plan to collect, disseminate and inform employees of changes made based on feedback can be an effective way to build a culture of open communication and help employees feel that their voices have been heard.
Below are recommendations that federal leaders can use to create more effective organizations that better serve both their employees and the public:
The Employee Customer Experience Factors reflect the Partnership for Public Service’s ongoing commitment to identifying the essential components of agency success. Like the Best Places to Work rankings, this analysis makes government performance more transparent to improve accountability and serves as a tool to help federal leaders improve their organizations and deliver better outcomes for the public.
This work also aligns with our vision for a better government and our ongoing advocacy efforts around systemic reforms to empower change in government and a renewed focus on providing efficient, customer-friendly services to the people.
Looking ahead, the Partnership sees several opportunities to enhance this analysis and provide additional insights for federal leaders:
By refining and expanding the Employee Customer Experience Factors, the Partnership for Public Service aims to support federal leaders in creating environments that foster delivery on their critical missions and service to the public.
Brandon Lardy leads the Partnership’s data science practice and internal data strategy. Raised by lifelong federal employees, Brandon’s appreciation for public service led him to the Partnership in 2015, where he spent six years managing quantitative data projects before serving as a public sector strategist for an AI startup. One of Brandon’s favorite public servants is Shirley Ann Jackson, the first Black woman to earn a doctorate from MIT and the first woman and Black American to lead the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
The analysis for the Mission Enabling Index relied on data from the following sources:
The Best Places to Work employee engagement and satisfaction score is derived from three different questions in OPM’s Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey: I recommend my organization as a good place to work. Considering everything, how satisfied are you with your job? Considering everything, how satisfied are you with your organization? To calculate the score, we use the percentage of positive responses in a weighted formula. The more the question predicted intent to remain on the job, the higher the weighting. The weightings for the formula are proprietary and are weighted according to a formula developed with the Hay Group (later acquired by Korn Ferry) in 2007.
The Mission-Support Customer Satisfaction Survey is an annual, voluntary survey led by OMB and managed by GSA that asks federal employees to rate how satisfied they are with mission-support functions and services, how important specific mission-support services are to achieving outcomes, and whether a function serves as an effective strategic partner. Employees are asked to rate their perception of satisfaction, importance, and strategic partnership for 24 service areas on a 7-point Likert Scale within the following four support functions:
The 2023 Mission-Support Customer Satisfaction Survey score was calculated using the aggregated percent of positive responses to the question of satisfaction across the four services and represents the percent of employees who reported being satisfied with the services they receive from each function.
The internal communication score was calculated using the following questions from the 2023 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey:
The goal clarity score was calculated using the following questions from the 2023 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey:
Using the mission-support function definitions from the 2023 Mission-Support Customer Satisfaction Survey and OPM’s Handbook of Occupational Groups and Families, the workforce for each mission-support function was defined using the following occupational groups:
The Partnership tested several different statistical methods for this analysis but settled on the following to determine the magnitude and statistical significance of relationships between the variables of interest.
Arfa Alam Senior Manager, Research, Analysis and Evaluation
Elizabeth Byers Manager, Research, Analysis and Evaluation
Bryon Casebolt Associate Manager, Programs, Research, Analysis and Evaluation
Delaney Hyde Associate Graphic Designer
Mark Jacobson Vice President, Research, Evaluation and Modernizing Government
Brandon Lardy Senior Manager, Data Science and Strategy
Tim Markatos UX Design Manager
Audrey Pfund Creative Director
Sahil Singh Manager, Customer Experience